Green Chile Chicken Soup

Green Chile Chicken Soup

Prep 15 min Cook 35 min Total 50 min Serves 6 servings Difficulty Easy 310 Cal Heat Medium 4.8 (41) Jump to recipe

This green chili chicken soup is everything a cold-weather bowl should be — tender shredded chicken, smoky roasted Hatch green chile, and creamy white beans in a broth that's cozy without being heavy. It's the chicken soup with green chiles I make when someone's under the weather or when the wind comes down off the mesa and we just need something warm. Easy enough for a weeknight, good enough for company.

Where a thick green chili is almost a stew, this leans soup: brothier, lighter, spoonable. It's the kind of green chili soup that fills the kitchen with the smell of chile and cumin and has everyone drifting in to ask what's on the stove. Our family has grown Hatch green chile in the Hatch Valley for five generations, and a chicken and green chili soup this simple lives or dies on the chile you put in it.

Why Hatch green chile makes this soup

The flavor backbone is Roasted Hatch Green Chile — fire-roasted at harvest, it brings a smoky depth and clean, grassy heat that canned green chiles simply can't deliver. In season we use Fresh Hatch Green Chile, roasted and peeled. Roasted Hatch chile runs mild to hot depending on the harvest, so pick a mild-to-medium roast for a soup the whole family can share, or reach for a hotter roast when you want it to clear your sinuses.

What to put in green chili chicken soup

The base is humble: chicken, onion, garlic, cumin, broth, and a generous amount of green chile. From there it's flexible. White beans (cannellini or Great Northern) add creaminess and stick-to-your-ribs heft without dairy. A handful of corn brings a little sweetness to balance the chile. Want it creamy? Stir in cream cheese or a splash of half-and-half at the end. Want it brothy and light? Leave the dairy out and let the beans do the thickening.

  • Chicken: rotisserie or any leftover cooked chicken shreds right in and keeps it fast; boneless thighs poached in the broth stay the juiciest if cooking from raw.
  • Beans: cannellini, Great Northern, or navy. Mash a few against the pot to thicken naturally.
  • Heat: a pinch of green chile powder or a diced jalapeño bumps it up; a hotter roast does the same.
  • No fresh chile? Our frozen roasted Hatch chile is picked and roasted at peak, so it's the next best thing to a September roaster.

Pro tips

Bloom the cumin and garlic in oil before the broth goes in — it wakes up the whole pot. Add the green chile early so it infuses the broth, and taste before you salt; roasted chile and beans both carry flavor, so you may need less than you think. If you're using raw chicken, poach it whole in the broth, then shred and return it — you get tender meat and a richer broth in one step.

Serving, storage, and reheating

Top each bowl with shredded Monterey Jack, a dollop of sour cream, sliced avocado, cilantro, and a squeeze of lime; warm flour tortillas on the side are non-negotiable in our house. This is a close cousin to our green enchilada soup and a lighter sibling to a hearty pot of green chile stew. Refrigerate leftovers up to 4 days — it only gets better — or freeze up to 3 months (freeze before adding dairy, then stir cream in after reheating). Warm it gently on the stovetop, loosening with a splash of broth as needed.

Short on time?

If you love this chile-and-chicken flavor but want dinner now, we make our family Hatch Green Chile Stew in our own kitchen and freeze it — same Hatch chile, ready in minutes. It's a heartier, pork-based cousin to this soup for the nights you don't have a pot to babysit.

The recipe

Green Chile Chicken Soup

4.8 from 41 reviews
  • Prep15 min
  • Cook35 min
  • Total50 min
  • Yield6 bowls
  • Calories310
Easymedium heat

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Heat the oil in a large pot over medium heat and cook the onion until softened, about 5 minutes.
  2. Stir in the garlic, cumin, and oregano and cook 1 minute until fragrant.
  3. Add the roasted green chile and the chicken broth and bring to a simmer.
  4. If using raw chicken, add the thighs whole and poach gently for 18 to 20 minutes until cooked through, then remove, shred, and return to the pot; if using cooked chicken, stir it in now.
  5. Add the white beans and corn, if using, and simmer 10 minutes; mash a few beans against the side of the pot to thicken.
  6. Reduce the heat and stir in the cream cheese or half-and-half, if using, until smooth.
  7. Taste and season with salt and pepper.
  8. Ladle into bowls and finish with cheese, sour cream, avocado, cilantro, and lime; serve with warm tortillas.

Pantry

Shop the chile used in this recipe

Roasted Hatch Chile (Frozen)

$75.00

Fresh Hatch Green Chile

Sale price $29.99 Regular price $34.99

Hatch Green Chile Stew

$75.00

Frequently asked questions

What goes in green chili chicken soup?
The base is shredded chicken, onion, garlic, cumin, chicken broth, and roasted green chile. White beans add creaminess and body, and corn adds a little sweetness. Finish with cream cheese for a creamy soup, and top with Monterey Jack, sour cream, avocado, cilantro, and lime.
What is the difference between green chili chicken soup and stew?
It's mostly texture. This green chili chicken soup is brothier, lighter, and spoonable, while a green chile stew is thicker and heartier, usually built on pork and potatoes for a chunkier braise. Both share roasted Hatch green chile as their flavor backbone.
What chile should I use for chicken soup with green chiles?
Roasted Hatch green chile is the best choice. Fire-roasted at harvest, it brings a smoky depth and clean heat that canned green chiles can't match. Choose a mild-to-medium roast for a family-friendly soup, or a hotter roast when you want real warmth in the bowl.
How do I make green chili chicken soup creamy?
Stir in cream cheese or a splash of half-and-half at the end, off direct high heat so the dairy melts smoothly without curdling. Mashing a few of the white beans against the pot also thickens it naturally. For a lighter soup, skip the dairy and let the beans do the work.
Can I use rotisserie chicken?
Yes. Rotisserie or any leftover cooked chicken shreds right in and turns this into a fast weeknight meal — just stir it in with the green chile and simmer long enough to meld the broth. If cooking from raw, poach boneless thighs in the broth, then shred and return them.
Can I freeze green chili chicken soup?
Yes. Freeze it up to 3 months, ideally before adding any dairy, then stir in cream cheese or half-and-half after thawing and reheating. Cool it fully first, freeze in airtight containers, and reheat gently on the stovetop, loosening with a splash of broth as needed.
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